Your junk could be Gen Z’s treasure. How to profit from the resurgence of Y2K fashion
Generation Z's interest in sustainable fashion and nostalgia fuels a booming secondhand market where 75% of vintage resale inventory is Y2K, experts say.
- Generation Z has embraced early 2000s fashion styles, such as Juicy Couture sweat sets and low-rise jeans, despite the dislike of many millennials.
- Experts believe that a 20-year gap allows younger generations to reinterpret their parents' fashions.
- Jocelyn Brown, owner of Arkival Storehouse, profits from reselling vintage clothing and promoting sustainability.
- Brown thinks that Y2K pieces will remain popular, styled in more individualized ways.
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21 Articles
21 Articles
Profiting from Y2K fashion resurgence
From Juicy Couture sweat sets and low-rise, bedazzled jeans to chunky belts and baby tees, early 2000s fashion is all the rage again. That potentially makes that old box of clothes in the back of your closet a sitting cash…
·Cherokee County, United States
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+17 Reposted by 17 other sources
Your junk could be Gen Z’s treasure. How to profit from the resurgence of Y2K fashion
Juicy Couture sweat sets and low-rise, bedazzled jeans. Chunky belts and baby tees and miniskirts. Early 2000s fashion is all the rage again.
·United States
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Total News Sources21
Leaning Left8Leaning Right4Center9Last UpdatedBias Distribution43% Center
Bias Distribution
- 43% of the sources are Center
43% Center
L 38%
C 43%
R 19%
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